Gabby and I synchronized today and both of us looked up the forecast for our holiday at the same moment! Cold when we arrive, and SNOW the next day. Cold but sunny the rest of the week . . . Pretty long sleeved tops being put back on hangers and more warm woollies replacing them . . .
I will share my "sketching practice" with you. Well, all I can say is perhaps I shan't be sketching architecture and castles when I get there. Weeds more like, I can do plants. Oh and horses.
Say no more! It IS still a work in progress as the end heads are awful. Middle one a tad less so! Stick to horses Jen!
Hackney
Aquilegia
The cats know the best place to be of an evening.
I have done some more painting in the guest bedroom. Two walls done bar for the very top and a bit of touching up. Now I'm started on the last wall (plank top one again) as the bit around the window is staying white. Reaching up high makes my shoulders ache and my neck arthritis start to think about complaining, so having a rest now (and from gardening) until I get back from holiday.
I managed a short - but cold - walk this afternoon. I parked up by Rob's (2nd hand house clearance stuff) and walked up to St Matthew's Church at Llanelwedd. It was locked again - should have taken a tip from Billy Blue Eyes and gone there when there is a service. Still, a wander round the graveyard reading names and dates got me out of the house and in the mood to bother a few more churches in Powys* and beyond.
I assume this may well be the original font, sat atop the base of a preaching cross? The tower is 14th C, so the font probably dates from that early period. The church was restored in late Victorian times.
Name at top broken off, but he was a Wheelright and married to Ann. Sadly their daughters died so young - Elizabeth aged 6 in 1801 and Mary, aged 1 yr & 9 mths, in the same year. Yet others made it to their late 80s and 90s . . .
* At the top of my church bucket list is St Melangell's, a Grade 1 listed church which has been on this site some 1200 years. It holds the shrine of St Melangell, patron saint of Hares and Rabbits.
"Saint Melangell was a female saint of the 7th century. According to tradition she came here from Ireland and lived as a hermit in the valley. One day Brochwel, Prince of Powys, was hunting and pursued a hare which took refuge under Melangell’s cloak. The Prince’s hounds fled, and he was moved by her courage and sanctity. He gave her the valley as a place of sanctuary, and Melangell became Abbess of a small religious community. After her death her memory continued to be honoured, and Pennant Melangell has been a place of pilgrimage for many centuries. Melangell remains the patron saint of hares." Taken from HERE.
She was mentioned in the talk I went to last Friday, and we were also shown some pictures of Medieval Killer Rabbits!!! to show that the Huntsmen didn't always have it their way :) Those did make us laugh.